20 KiB
layout | page_title | sidebar_current | description |
---|---|---|---|
docs | Connect - Envoy Integration | docs-connect-proxies-envoy | Consul Connect has first-class support for configuring Envoy proxy. |
Envoy Integration
Consul Connect has first class support for using Envoy as a proxy. Consul configures Envoy by optionally exposing a gRPC service on the local agent that serves Envoy's xDS configuration API.
Consul can configure Envoy sidecars to proxy http/1.1, http2 or gRPC traffic at L7 or any other tcp-based protocol at L4. Prior to Consul 1.5.0 Envoy proxies could only proxy tcp at L4.
Currently configuration of additional L7 features is limited, however we have plans to support a wider range of features in the next major release cycle.
As an interim solution, you can add custom Envoy configuration in the proxy service definition allowing you to use the more powerful features of Envoy.
~> Note: When using Envoy with Consul and not using the consul connect envoy
command
Envoy must be run with the --max-obj-name-len
option set to 256
or greater.
Supported Versions
Consul's Envoy support was added in version 1.3.0. The following table shows compatible Envoy versions.
Consul Version | Compatible Envoy Versions |
---|---|
1.5.2 and higher | 1.11.1 1.10.0, 1.9.1, 1.8.0† |
1.5.0, 1.5.1 | 1.9.1, 1.8.0† |
1.3.x, 1.4.x | 1.9.1, 1.8.0†, 1.7.0† |
!> Security Note: Envoy versions lower than 1.9.1 are vulnerable to CVE-2019-9900 and CVE-2019-9901. Both are related to HTTP request parsing and so only affect Consul Connect users if they have configured HTTP routing rules via the "escape hatch". Still, we recommend that you use the most recent supported Envoy for your Consul version where possible.
Getting Started
To get started with Envoy and see a working example you can follow the Using Envoy with Connect guide.
Configuration
Envoy proxies require two types of configuration: an initial bootstrap configuration and dynamic configuration that is discovered from a "management server", in this case Consul.
The bootstrap configuration at a minimum needs to configure the proxy with an identity (node id) and the location of it's local Consul agent from which it discovers all of it's dynamic configuration. See Bootstrap Configuration for more details.
The dynamic configuration Consul Connect provides to each Envoy instance includes:
- TLS certificates and keys to enable mutual authentication and keep certificates rotating.
- Service-discovery results for upstreams to enable each sidecar proxy to load-balance outgoing connections.
- L7 configuration including timeouts and protocol-specific options.
For more information on the parts of the Envoy proxy runtime configuration that are currently controllable via Consul Connect see Dynamic Configuration.
We plan to enable more and more of Envoy's features through Connect's first-class configuration over time, however some advanced users will need additional control to configure Envoy in specific ways. To enable this, we provide several "escape hatch" options that allow users to provide low-level raw Envoy config syntax for some sub-components in each Envoy instance. This allows operators to have full control over and responsibility for correctly configuring Envoy and ensuring version support etc.
Bootstrap Configuration
Envoy requires an initial bootstrap configuration file. The easiest way to
create this is using the consul connect envoy
command. The command can either output the
bootstrap configuration directly to stdout or can generate it and then exec
the Envoy binary as a convenience wrapper.
Because some Envoy configuration options like metrics and tracing sinks can only be specified via the bootstrap configuration, Connect as of Consul 1.5.0 adds the ability to control some parts of the bootstrap config via proxy configuration options.
Users can add the following configuration items to the global proxy-defaults
configuration entry or override them directly in the proxy.config
field
of a proxy service
definition or
sidecar_service
block.
-
envoy_statsd_url
- A URL in the formudp://ip:port
identifying a UDP StatsD listener that Envoy should deliver metrics to. For example, this may beudp://127.0.0.1:8125
if every host has a local StatsD listener. In this case users can configure this property once in the globalproxy-defaults
configuration entry for convenience. Currently, TCP is not supported.~> Note: currently the url must use an ip address not a dns name due to the way Envoy is setup for StatsD.
Users can also specify the whole parameter in the form
$ENV_VAR_NAME
, which will cause theconsul connect envoy
command to resolve the actual URL from the named environment variable when it runs. This, for example, allows each pod in a Kubernetes cluster to learn of a pod-specific IP address for StatsD when the Envoy instance is bootstrapped while still allowing global configuration of all proxies to use StatsD in the globalproxy-defaults
configuration entry. The env variable must contain a full valid URL value as specified above and nothing else. It is not currently possible to use environment variables as only part of the URL. -
envoy_dogstatsd_url
- The same asenvoy_statsd_url
with the following differences in behavior:- Envoy will use dogstatsd tags instead of statsd dot-separated metric names.
- As well as
udp://
, aunix://
URL may be specified if your agent can listen on a unix socket (e.g. the dogstatsd agent).
-
envoy_prometheus_bind_addr
- Specifies that the proxy should expose a Prometheus metrics endpoint to the public network. It must be supplied in the formip:port
and port and the ip/port combination must be free within the network namespace the proxy runs. Typically the IP would be0.0.0.0
to bind to all available interfaces or a pod IP address.-> Note: Envoy versions prior to 1.10 do not export timing histograms using the internal Prometheus endpoint.
-
envoy_stats_tags
- Specifies one or more static tags that will be added to all metrics produced by the proxy. -
envoy_stats_flush_interval
- Configures Envoy'sstats_flush_interval
.
There are more possibilities available in the Advanced Configuration section that allow incremental or complete control over the bootstrap configuration generated.
Dynamic Configuration
Consul automatically generates Envoy's dynamic configuration based on its knowledge of the cluster. Users may specify default configuration options for each service such as which protocol they speak. Consul will use this information to configure appropriate proxy settings for that service's proxies and also for the upstream listeners of any downstream service.
Users can define a service's protocol in its service-defaults
configuration
entry. Agents with
enable_central_service_config
set to true will automatically discover the protocol when configuring a proxy
for a service. The proxy will discover the main protocol of the service it
represents and use this to configure its main public listener. It will also
discover the protocols defined for any of its upstream services and
automatically configure its upstream listeners appropriately too as below.
This automated discovery results in Consul auto-populating the proxy.config
and proxy.upstreams[*].config
fields of the proxy service
definition that is
actually registered.
Proxy Config Options
These fields may also be overridden explicitly in the proxy service
definition, or defined in
the global proxy-defaults
configuration
entry to act as
defaults that are inherited by all services.
protocol
- The protocol the service speaks. Connect's Envoy integration currently supports the followingprotocol
values:tcp
- Unless otherwise specified this is the default, which causes Envoy to proxy at L4. This provides all the security benefits of Connect's mTLS and works for any TCP-based protocol. Load-balancing and metrics are available at the connection level.http
- This specifies that the service speaks HTTP/1.x. Envoy will setup anhttp_connection_manager
and will be able to load-balance requests individually to available upstream services. Envoy will also emit L7 metrics such as request rates broken down by HTTP response code family (2xx, 4xx, 5xx, etc).http2
- This specifies that the service speaks http2 (specifically h2c since Envoy will still only connect to the local service instance via plain TCP not TLS). This behaves much likehttp
with L7 load-balancing and metrics but has additional settings that correctly enable end-to-end http2.grpc
- gRPC is a common RPC protocol based on http2. In addition to the http2 support above, Envoy listeners will be configured with a gRPC bridge filter that translates HTTP/1.1 calls into gRPC, and instruments metrics withgRPC-status
trailer codes.
bind_address
- Override the address Envoy's public listener binds to. By default Envoy will bind to the service address or 0.0.0.0 if there is not explicit address on the service registration.bind_port
- Override the port Envoy's public listener binds to. By default Envoy will bind to the service port.local_connect_timeout_ms
- The number of milliseconds allowed to make connections to the local application instance before timing out. Defaults to 5000 (5 seconds).
Proxy Upstream Config Options
The following configuration items may be overridden directly in the
proxy.upstreams[].config
field of a proxy service
definition or
sidecar_service
block.
protocol
- Same as above in main config but affects the listener setup for the upstream.connect_timeout_ms
- The number of milliseconds to allow when making upstream connections before timing out. Defaults to 5000 (5 seconds).
Mesh Gateway Options (beta)
These fields may also be overridden explicitly in the proxy service
definition, or defined in
the global proxy-defaults
configuration
entry to act as
defaults that are inherited by all services.
-
connect_timeout_ms
- The number of milliseconds to allow when making upstream connections before timing out. Defaults to 5000 (5 seconds). -
envoy_mesh_gateway_bind_tagged_addresses
- Indicates that the mesh gateway services tagged addresses should be bound to listeners in addition to the default listener address. -
envoy_mesh_gateway_bind_addresses
- A map of additional addresses to be bound. This map's keys are the name of the listeners to be created and the values are a map with two keys, address and port, that combined make the address to bind the listener to. These are bound in addition to the default address. -
envoy_mesh_gateway_no_default_bind
- Prevents binding to the default address of the mesh gateway service. This should be used with one of the other options to configure the gateways bind addresses.
Advanced Configuration
To support more flexibility when configuring Envoy, several "lower-level" options exist that require knowledge of Envoy's configuration format. Many options allow configuring a subsection of either the bootstrap or dynamic configuration using your own custom protobuf config.
We separate these into two sets, Advanced Bootstrap Options and Escape Hatch Overrides. Both require writing Envoy config in the protobuf JSON encoding. Advanced options cover smaller chunks that might commonly need to be set for tasks like configuring tracing. In contrast, escape hatches give almost complete control over the proxy setup, but require operators to manually code the entire configuration in protobuf JSON.
~> Advanced Topic! This section covers options that allow users to take almost complete control of Envoy's configuration. We provide these options so users can experiment or take advantage of features not yet fully supported in Consul Connect. We plan to retain this ability in the future, but it should still be considered experimental because it requires in-depth knowledge of Envoy's configuration format. Users should consider Envoy version compatibility when using these features because they can configure Envoy in ways that are outside of Consul's control. Incorrect configuration could prevent all proxies in your mesh from functioning correctly, or bypass the security guarantees Connect is designed to enforce.
Configuration Formatting
All configurations are specified as strings containing the serialized proto3 JSON encoding of the specified Envoy configuration type. They are full JSON types except where noted.
The JSON supplied may describe a protobuf types.Any
message with an @type
field set to the appropriate type (for example
type.googleapis.com/envoy.api.v2.Listener
), or it may be the direct encoding
with no @type
field.
Advanced Bootstrap Options
Users may add the following configuration items to the global proxy-defaults
configuration
entry or
override them directly in the proxy.config
field of a proxy service
definition or
sidecar_service
block.
envoy_extra_static_clusters_json
- Specifies one or more Envoy clusters that will be appended to the array of static clusters in the bootstrap config. This allows adding custom clusters for tracing sinks for example. For a single cluster just encode a single object, for multiple, they should be comma separated with no trailing comma suitable for interpolating directly into a JSON array inside the braces.envoy_extra_static_listeners_json
- Similar toenvoy_extra_static_clusters_json
but appends static listener definitions. Can be used to setup limited access that bypasses Connect mTLS or authorization for health checks or metrics.envoy_extra_stats_sinks_json
- Similar toenvoy_extra_static_clusters_json
but for stats sinks. These are appended to any sinks defined by use of the higher-levelenvoy_statsd_url
orenvoy_dogstatsd_url
config options.envoy_stats_config_json
- The entire stats config. If provided this will override the higher-levelenvoy_stats_tags
. It allows full control over dynamic tag replacements etc.envoy_tracing_json
- The entire tracing config. Most tracing providers will also require adding static clusters to define the endpoints to send tracing data to.
Escape-Hatch Overrides
Users may add the following configuration items to the global proxy-defaults
configuration
entry or
override them directly in the proxy.config
field of a proxy service
definition or
sidecar_service
block.
envoy_bootstrap_json_tpl
- Specifies a template in Go template syntax that is used in place of the default template when generating bootstrap viaconsul connect envoy
command. The variables that are available to be interpolated are documented here. This offers complete control of the proxy's bootstrap although major deviations from the default template may break Consul's ability to correctly manage the proxy or enforce it's security model.envoy_public_listener_json
- Specifies a complete Listener to be delivered in place of the main public listener that the proxy used to accept inbound connections. This will be used verbatim with the following exceptions:- Every
FilterChain
added to the listener will have itsTlsContext
overridden by the Connect TLS certificates and validation context. This means there is no way to override Connect's mutual TLS for the public listener. - Every
FilterChain
will have theenvoy.ext_authz
filter prepended to the filters array to ensure that all inbound connections are authorized by Connect.
- Every
envoy_local_cluster_json
- Specifies a complete Envoy cluster to be delivered in place of the local application cluster. This allows customization of timeouts, rate limits, load balancing strategy etc.
The following configuration items may be overridden directly in the
proxy.upstreams[].config
field of a proxy service
definition or
sidecar_service
block.
envoy_listener_json
- Specifies a complete Listener to be delivered in place of the upstream listener that the proxy exposes to the application for outbound connections. This will be used verbatim with the following exceptions:- Every
FilterChain
added to the listener will have itsTlsContext
overridden by the Connect TLS certificates and validation context. This means there is no way to override Connect's mutual TLS for the public listener.
- Every
envoy_cluster_json
- Specifies a complete Envoy cluster to be delivered in place of the discovered upstream cluster. This allows customization of timeouts, circuit breaking, rate limits, load balancing strategy etc.